Chadwick Aaron Boseman was born on November 29, 1976, in Anderson, South Carolina, to Carolyn and Leroy Boseman. He grew up in a close-knit community in a small Southern city, deeply influenced by his family's faith and the storytelling traditions of the Black South. His passion for drama emerged in high school, where a friend's death from gun violence moved him to write a play — an early demonstration of the ENFJ's instinct to transform communal grief into communal meaning through artistic expression. He attended Howard University, one of America's most prestigious Historically Black Colleges and Universities, where he studied directing and was taught and influenced by the legendary acting teacher Phylicia Rashad.
Boseman's professional journey before Black Panther was the archetypal working actor's path — years of television roles (Lincoln Heights, Castle, Law & Order), theatre work, and the slow accumulation of craft through varied experience. His breakout came when he was cast as Jackie Robinson in 42 (2013), the first Black major league baseball player — a role that required him to portray not just athletic excellence but the specific, agonizing dignity of a man who had agreed to absorb racist abuse without retaliating, as a condition of breaking a barrier. His performance was praised for capturing both the extraordinary self-control required and the internal fire that made that self-control possible. He followed this with an equally praised portrayal of James Brown in Get On Up (2014).
The role of T'Challa / Black Panther in Captain America: Civil War (2016) and then the standalone Black Panther (2018) transformed Boseman into a global icon. Black Panther was not merely a commercial phenomenon — a $1.3 billion worldwide gross — but a cultural event of extraordinary significance: the first Marvel film to center a Black superhero, set in an African nation of stunning beauty and technological sophistication. For millions of Black children and adults worldwide, seeing T'Challa — regal, powerful, African — on screen was a significant experience. Boseman understood this weight and carried it with evident intention, using the platform to speak about African history, representation, and dignity in ways that extended the film's impact far beyond its runtime.
What was unknown to the public during the entire run of Boseman's career peak — from 42 in 2013 through his final performance in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2020) — was that he had been diagnosed with Stage III colon cancer in 2016, the same year he first appeared as Black Panther. He filmed all his major roles, including three Marvel films and two other major features, while undergoing chemotherapy and surgeries. He died on August 28, 2020, at 43. His posthumous Academy Award nomination for Ma Rainey's Black Bottom was, for many, a reflection on the full weight of what he had accomplished: an artist who had used his time with extraordinary intentionality, choosing roles that carried meaning and delivering performances of deep humanity even while his body was failing. The ENFJ's final gift: he never stopped showing up for others.